Towards Active Motion Planning in Interactive Driving Scenarios: A Generic Utility Term of Interaction Activeness

Research output: Contribution to book/conference proceedings/anthology/reportConference contributionContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Xiaocong Zhao - , Tongji University (Author)
  • Meng Wang - , Chair of Traffic Process Automation, TUD Dresden University of Technology (Author)
  • Shiyu Fang - , Tongji University (Author)
  • Jian Sun - , Tongji University (Author)

Abstract

Interacting with other vehicles while ensuring safety is a routine task for human drivers, but it can pose a challenge for autonomous vehicles. To address this challenge, we derived a generic utility term of interaction activeness (UTIA) from the driving interaction formulation which considers the rationality of interacting counterparts. Our research shows that incorporating UTIA as a supplementary utility term can improve the active interaction capability of both sampling-based and game-theoretic baseline motion planners without compromising safety. Through simulation experiments, we observed that on average, incorporating the weighted UTIA into the utility function of baseline planners can result in an 8.8% increase in the success rate of exiting a highway within a set distance.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationIEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium, Proceedings
PublisherIEEE Xplore
Number of pages6
ISBN (electronic)9798350346916
ISBN (print)979-8-3503-4692-3
Publication statusPublished - 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

Publication series

SeriesIEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium (IV)
Volume2023-June

Conference

Title2023 IEEE Intelligent Vehicles Symposium
Abbreviated titleIV 2023
Conference number35
Duration4 - 7 June 2023
LocationDena’ina Civic and Convention Center & William A. Egan Civic & Convention Center
CityAnchorage
CountryUnited States of America

External IDs

Mendeley e6fe19aa-da14-3447-835c-6d47fde9406f

Keywords

Keywords

  • autonomous vehicles, driving interaction, highway exiting, motion planning